France in the Middle
Jacques Le Cacheux and
Georges Ross
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Abstract:
France has been an "in between" case, neither prosperous nor declining, with a generous welfare state, strong employment protection, and modest income inequality. Elite values, the high political risks of large changes, and a political system that makes governments vulnerable to small shifts in opinion are among the causes. There has been no shortage of reforms, including supply-side policies and quests for new revenues, but without either harsh neo-liberalism or corporatist adaptability. France's economy has been comparatively successful, but success has become harder, mainly because EMU has narrowed macroeconomic room for maneuver. High unemployment and dualism have tested the social contract while recent economic crises have tested EMU limits. Low growth reduces revenues and expands unemployment, and new taxation is politically disruptive. Governing political parties and the political system itself may be losing credibility because of deindustrialization, stagnant productivity, and losses in market share. Is France an unexploded ticking bomb?
Keywords: France; Gaullist statism; Social spending; Bismarckian–Beveridgean hybrid (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2014
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Published in Jon Erik Dølvik; Andrew Martin. European Social Models from Crisis to Crisis, Employment and Inequality in the Era of Monetary Union, Oxford University Press, 2014, 9780198717966
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hal:journl:hal-03398934
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